As U.S. GDP growth estimates fall, Canada’s economy picks up steam

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Canada > America


As U.S. GDP growth estimates fall, Canada’s economy picks up steam

After two years of underperforming the United States, is the Canadian economy about to outshine its southern neighbour?

It's starting to look like it.

Friday's release of gross domestic product for January will provide the first read on Canada's economic performance in 2017. Following last week's solid retail sales and wholesale trade and manufacturing data, economists have been raising their forecasts for January growth.

"We are now looking for January GDP to rise almost 0.4 per cent," Bank of Montreal chief economist Douglas Porter said in a note. "In turn, this builds in a [first-quarter annualized] gain of at least 2.7 per cent, with some serious upside risk."

Estimates for first-quarter U.S. GDP growth, meanwhile, are "falling like a rock" and some projections are now below 1 per cent, Mr. Porter said. Weak productivity gains, a strong U.S. dollar that favours imports and some quirks in the way first-quarter U.S. GDP is calculated could all be contributing to the softening U.S. outlook.

North of the border, Canada is benefiting from steady oil prices, which are helping to stabilize the Alberta economy, and from fiscal stimulus measures that may be giving Canada a boost. By contrast, the Trump administration – which has pledged to increase infrastructure spending – received a major setback to its legislative agenda last week when the Republican Party's health-care bill was pulled for lack of support.

Canada's strengthening economy will have implications for the Bank of Canada, which has held its benchmark interest rate steady even as the U.S. Federal Reserve has raised rates three times since December, 2015 – with more increases likely this year.

The topic of Canada's accelerating growth will likely come up at Stephen Poloz's press conference on Tuesday morning, when the Bank of Canada governor is scheduled to speak at Durham College in Oshawa, Ont.

"The Canadian economy seems to be firing on almost all of its cylinders, and that continued into the start of 2017," said economist Nick Exarhos of CIBC World Markets, which is also looking for a 0.4-per-cent advance in January output. In light of the expected strength, CIBC raised its first-quarter GDP growth estimate to an annualized 3.5 per cent.

"As a result, there's only so much longer that the Bank of Canada can maintain its overtly dovish tone, without at least acknowledging the recent beats on the economic front," Mr. Exarhos said.

Friday also marks the last day of the first quarter, which means earnings season will soon be upon us.

As things stand now, it's shaping up as a blowout quarter.

According to FactSet Research, the projected year-over-year earnings growth rate for the S&P 500 is currently 9.1 per cent, based on analysts' estimates. The last time earnings grew at such a scorching pace was the fourth quarter of 2011, when they rose 11.6 per cent.

The sector that is expected to contribute the most to first-quarter earnings growth? Energy. Thanks to a combination of cost cutting and higher oil prices, S&P 500 energy companies are expected to swing to an aggregate profit of $7.7-billion (U.S.) in the first quarter of 2017 from a loss of $1.5-billion in the first quarter of 2016. The average price of oil has averaged about $52.07 a barrel so far in 2017 – more than 50 per cent higher than the average of $33.69 in the first quarter of 2016, FactSet says.

Excluding the energy sector, the S&P's estimated earnings growth rate would be a more modest 5.2 per cent.

As the first quarter draws to a close, fourth-quarter results will continue to trickle in. Among Canadian companies reporting this week, Lululemon Athletica Inc. is scheduled to release results after markets close on Wednesday, Dollarama Inc. will report before markets open on Thursday and BlackBerry Ltd. is on deck before the open on Friday.

https://beta.theglobeandmail.com/re...http://www.theglobeandmail.com&service=mobile
 

coldstream

on dbl secret probation
Oct 19, 2005
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The GDP figures are rigged. The definition has been constantly revised to present the best slant on an economy that is being systematically deindustrialized; with what real wealth in being produced being increasingly polarized. A lot of GDP these days has nothing to do with 'Product'.. it just represents a lot of shuffling of paper and commodities around.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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The GDP figures are rigged. The definition has been constantly revised to present the best slant on an economy that is being systematically deindustrialized; with what real wealth in being produced being increasingly polarized. A lot of GDP these days has nothing to do with 'Product'.. it just represents a lot of shuffling of paper and commodities around.

I'm calling BS as well, this MentalFlush article is pure dung, he's going to have to be registered here as a lobyists for liars, a Spam organ for financial shell game racketeers both governrnental and corporate. Relax, he says ,the Canadian economy is not taking on water while we watch the deck chairs wash about
 

Machjo

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 19, 2004
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I personally prefer efficiency and sustainability over growth. Both the US and Canadian growth rates are debt-induced.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
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GDP numbers Friday expected to show economy started 2017 strong

Some economists are revising their forecasts upward for Canadian first-quarter gross domestic product growth, ahead of the Friday release of figures for January.

The market consensus for January calls for a growth rate of 0.3 per cent, which would match the December report. Several bank economists, however, now expect to see growth of 0.4 per cent for the first month of 2017.

TD Economics expects the goods sector to benefit from gains in manufacturing and a continuing recovery in resources, although they anticipate a pullback in utilities due to unseasonably warm weather. Meanwhile, TD expects Canada's services sector will be supported by strong retail sales and the housing market.

At CIBC, economist Nick Exarhos said in a recent commentary that the Canadian economy "seems to be firing on almost all of its cylinders," with recent strong reports on manufacturing, wholesale trade and retail sales.

"As a result, we're upgrading our quarterly growth outlook to roughly 3½ per cent after a strong January performance, even allowing for more tepid gains over the balance of the quarter," he said.

BMO said that growth of 0.4 per cent for January builds into a gain of at least 2.7 per cent for the quarter.

"We have, for now, held to our call of 2.3 per cent growth for all of 2017, but have the pencil and eraser at the ready to nudge that higher," BMO Capital Markets chief economist Douglas Porter said in a recent commentary.

The Bank of Canada is currently projecting 2.1 per cent growth for 2017, while last week's federal budget estimate called for an expansion of 1.9 per cent.

GDP numbers Friday expected to show economy started 2017 strong - Business - CBC News
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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What flossy missed as usual is that the reasons the Canadian economy isn't totally destroyed is high house prices and demand by foreigners and our northern peso. ANyone that thinks a 72cent dollar is a booming economy is either stupid or highly selective in their information gathering. Or possibly both.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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What flossy missed as usual is that the reasons the Canadian economy isn't totally destroyed is high house prices and demand by foreigners and our northern peso. ANyone that thinks a 72cent dollar is a booming economy is either stupid or highly selective in their information gathering. Or possibly both.

We boom here in the East with a $0.72 as long as we don't buy anything much from the Americans. A minority of Canadians lose with the low dollar. As long as you spend your dollars here in Canada, it makes no difference to most consumers what the exchange rate is with the Americans.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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So what your saying is that you have 2 usernames on this forum..

I thought that was against forum rules..???

Special privileges on this board:

1. More than two usernames
2. Keep threads you like, but those you don't are folded into larger, nebulous threads
3. You can be a racist troll as long as the target isn't white people
 

White_Unifier

Senate Member
Feb 21, 2017
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So what your saying is that you have 2 usernames on this forum..

I thought that was against forum rules..???

Technically, I have only one since I don't intend to use my old one anymore. That post was an unintentional error and I'd have no qualms about having that username deleted.

Special privileges on this board:

3. You can be a racist troll as long as the target isn't white people

Oh please quote a racist quote of mine!